‘Polikatoikea’ / Filipe Magalhaes and Ana Luisa Soares

Filipe Magalhaes and Ana Luisa Soares shared with us their first prize winning proposal in the open ideas competition organized by Origami Competitions. The competition focused on an empty plot in Oporto, Portugal, where they were asked to develop a fresh and contemporary residential proposal that could be spread through the city. ‘Polikatoikea’ does just that in seeking a compromise between a greek rule (polikatoika) and a swedish philosophy (ikea). More images and architects’ description after the break.

Courtesy of Filipe Magalhaes and Ana Luisa Soares

The project is an (almost) politic move that seeks the densification of the city through a low-cost construction targeting a young and unattached client. (On a conceptual level) the project attempts to provide an idea that fights the ‘desertification’ where, in face of an unstable economic conjecture, the low cost appears as a possible (and affordable) solution. The backyard is seen as the basic element of the proposal: it is abstracted and repeated on every floor unfolding a series of new public platforms.

Courtesy of Filipe Magalhaes and Ana Luisa Soares

New terraces are proposed above the previous rooftops using simple structural solutions, offering more square meters to the city without leaving the plot. In these new places density is created by placing individual capsules, bubbles of private space. Thinking about Japanese metabolist principles, which seem increasingly current, the capsule becomes the ‘house’ filling all the contemporary basic living needs.

Archdaily
the art of copying and pasting the technical report.
Your site looks like a IKEA catalog that helps to sell the architecture.
Why this extreme simplification?

Best regards,
Salvatore D’Agostino

PS: This is a general comment not redo this project

Tiago

The World needs extreme and simple answers that respond to future needs of this “consumist” architecture. This project (in my opinion) is a simple answer to the future of housing. Congratulations to the winners! TB

VL

At last, the Greek version of a multi-apartments building known as ‘Polykatoikia’ with an average
of 4-6 floors, seems that has affected the world. Bingo……